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Trump Did Not Convince North Korea to Ditch Nukes. China Did. [1]
Mike Whitney
The Unz Review
April 30, 2018Mike Whitney writes on politics and finances and lives in Washington state. He is a regular contributor to many respected alternative news sites. He can be reached at feriewhitney@msn.com
Donald Trump thinks his “maximum pressure” campaign persuaded North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program. But it’s a bunch of baloney. The reason Kim Jong-un is planning to denuclearize is because China adamantly opposes nuclear weapons on the peninsula.
That’s the whole deal in a nutshell. China, who is North Korea’s biggest trading partner, gave Kim an ultimatum: Ditch the nukes or face long-term economic strangulation. Kim very wisely chose the former option, which is to say, he backed down.
The situation in North Korea is really quite bleak. Consider, for example, this recent piece in a United Nations periodical titled “The 5 most under-reported humanitarian crises that are happening right now”. Heading the list is this blurb on North Korea:
- “….what has been drastically underreported in the last year is that unprecedented number of people who are going hungry. The UN estimates that 70 percent of the population, or 18 million people, are food-insecure and reliant on government aid. To make things worse, last year North Korea experienced its worst drought in 16 years, exacerbating an already dire food shortage. With tight control of its borders keeping out aid organizations and journalists, it’s almost impossible to capture how many are actually receiving the urgent food aid they need.” (U.N. Dispatch)
Unfortunately, famine and drought are just the tip of the iceberg. The economic sanctions have added a whole new layer to the North’s misery, in fact, they have brought the economy to its knees. Pyongyang might have been able to muddle through had Beijing not joined the international blockade, but once China agreed to participate, the North’s fate was sealed.
In the last year, the DPRK’s currency has dropped precipitously, the country’s import-export trade has been slashed by half, and the battered economy has plunged into a deep slump. The problem is almost entirely attributable to China’s tightening sanctions regime which has effectively cut off the flow of capital and vital resources to the North. In order to grasp how overly dependent the DPRK is on China, take a look at this:
- “Trade with China represents 57% of North Korea’s imports and 42% of its exports.
In February 2017, China restricted all coal imports from North Korea until 2018. This is considered to be extremely harmful to the North Korean economy, as coal was the top export of the nation, and China was their top trading partner…
On 28 September 2017… China ordered all North Korean companies operating in China to cease operations within 120 days. By January 2018 customs statistics showed that trade between the two countries had fallen to the lowest level recorded.
On 7 May 2013, Bank of China, China’s biggest foreign exchange bank and other Chinese banks closed the account of North Korea’s main foreign exchange bank.
On 21 February 2016 China quietly ended financial support of North Korea without any media publicity. It is reported to be due to the fallout of relations between the two governments….”(Wikipedia)
China Sanctions Summary:
1. China destroyed the North’s import and export trade, including the North’s primary export, coal.
2. China shut down all the DPRK’s companies operating in China. (terminating the recycling of revenues back to the North.)
3. China cut off access to foreign banking. (and, thus, foreign investment)
4. China stopped providing any financial support for the North.What other country could withstand this type of economic strangulation by its biggest trading partner? None of this has anything to do with Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign which really had no effect onKim’s decision at all. Denuclearization is all China’s doing.
China put a gun to Kim’s head and simply waited for him to cave in. Which he did. He very wisely chose the path of least resistance: Capitulation.
The question is: What did Kim get in return?
Before we answer that, we need to understand that China-DPRK relations have been strained for more than a year, dating back to early 2017 when China joined the US effort to impose sanctions on the North.
The Korean News Agency sharply rebuked China for its disloyalty saying, “(China) is dancing to the tune of the US while defending its hostile behavior with excuses that (the sanctions) were not meant to hurt the North Korean people, but to check its nuclear program.”
While the North’s anger is understandable, it’s worth pointing out that Beijing has always opposed Kim’s nuclear weapons programs, in fact, in 2016, (long before bilateral relations soured) China’s Foreign Minister openly condemned the DPRK’s behavior saying, “We strongly urge the DPRK side to remain committed to its denuclearization commitment, and stop taking any actions that would make the situation worse.”
The warning was followed a year later by joint sanctions aimed at forcing Kim to give up his nukes. To Beijing’s credit, the goal was never to punish or humiliate the North, but to strengthen regional security by reducing access to nuclear weapons. Bottom line: China has acted responsibly throughout.
In March 2018, Kim made an unannounced visit to General Secretary Xi Jinping in Beijing. Kim was given the red carpet treatment for four days while the two leaders huddled and worked out their strategy for denuclearization in the context of a broader economic revitalization program aimed at integrating the peninsula with the rest of the continent.
Very little is known about the 4-day confab in Beijing, but it’s obvious that Kim was encouraged to normalize relations with his counterpart (Moon Jae-in) in the South based on a firm commitment to decommission his nuclear weapons.
It is no coincidence that the meeting between the two leaders and Kim’s dramatic reversal in policy took place just weeks after Kim met with the Chinese Premier. Clearly, China was the driving force behind Kim’s decision.
Critics of process think the North is engaged in an elaborate hoax that will amount to nothing, but that is probably not the case. Keep in mind, it is Beijing that is calling the shots not Kim.
If China wants Kim to abandon his nukes, that’s probably what he will do.
Of course, Kim would not go along with Beijing’s demands if he thought he might be putting his country at risk of a preemptive attack by the United States. Nor would he give up his nukes if he thought he was going to wind up like Mummar Gaddafi who was savagely skewered after he succumbed to US demands to surrender his WMD.
So how did China manage to convince Kim that he had nothing to worry about?
This question has not yet been fully answered, but we have to assume that China (and perhaps Russia) provided assurances to Kim that his country would be defended if attacked by the United States. Such guarantees would not be unprecedented, in fact, in 2017 Beijing stated clearly that no unprovoked attack by the US on the DPRK would go unanswered. Here’s part of the statement which appeared in Chinese state media:
- “China should make it clear that if North Korea launches missiles that threaten U.S. soil first and the U.S. retaliates, China will stay neutral,” (but) “If the U.S. and South Korea carry out strikes and try to overthrow the North Korean regime and change the political pattern of the Korean Peninsula, China will prevent them from doing so.”
“China opposes both nuclear proliferation and war in the Korean Peninsula. It will not encourage any side to stir up military conflict, and will firmly resist any side which wants to change the status quo of the areas where China’s interests are concerned.”
Beijing must have allayed Kim’s fears or he never would have agreed to denuclearize. But now that he feels protected, Kim appears to be eager to reconcile with his new friends in the South. Here’s what he said on Friday:
- “I look forward to making the most of this opportunity so that we have the chance to heal the wounds between the North and the South…. I came here to put an end to the history of confrontation as well as to work shoulder to shoulder with you to tackle the obstacles between us. I came with the confidence that a brighter future awaits us.”
Kim is serious. He wants to restart the peace process and restore economic ties with the South. He formalized his commitment by signing a document that called for “the prohibition of the use of force in any form against each other”, “an end to the war” and”complete denuclearization.”
Also, both leaders are committed to the gradual economic integration of the North and South via vital infrastructure projects that will strengthen popular support for the (eventual) reunification of the country. The importance of this joint commitment cannot be overstated.
Kim is not simply giving up his nukes to placate China or ease sanctions, he is taking the first step on a path towards “balanced economic growth and shared prosperity”.
Item 6 in the Panmunjeom Declaration”, which Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in signed, lays it out in black and white:
- “South and North Korea agreed to actively implement the projects previously agreed in the 2007 October 4 Declaration, in order to promote balanced economic growth and co-prosperity of the nation. As a first step, the two sides agreed to adopt practical steps towards the connection and modernization of the railways and roads on the eastern transportation corridor as well as between Seoul and Sinuiju for their utilization.”
The clause articulates the same vision for the future as an earlier integration plan that was drafted at the the Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) in Vladivostok on September 6-7, 2017. The meetings– which included North and South Korea, Japan, Russia and China– focused on drawing neighboring states into a common economic space with lowered trade barriers to promote development and prosperity.
The strategy has been dubbed the Putin Plan and it is designed in a way that it can be easily linked to the Eurasian Union project and China’s strategic “Silk Road Economic Belt” project. The ultimate objective is to create a free-trade zone (“Greater Europe”) that extends from Lisbon to Vladivostok.
The plan is explained in greater detail in Gavan McCormick’s excellent article at The Asia-Pacific Journal titled “North Korea and a Rules-Based Order for the Indo-Pacific, East Asia, and the World”. The Putin Plan anticipates multiple Siberian oil and gas pipelines criss-crossing the two Koreas to railways and ports that are linked to Japan, China, the Middle East, South Asia, and Europe. Here’s an excerpt from the article:
- “South Korea’s President Moon projected his understanding of this within the frame of what he called “Northeast Asia-plus,” which involved construction of “nine bridges of cooperation” (gas, railroads, ports, electricity, a northern sea route, shipbuilding, jobs, agriculture, and fisheries), embedding the Korean peninsula in the frame of the Russian and Chinese-led BRICS, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and Shanghai Cooperation Organiziation (SCO) organizations, extending and consolidating those vast, China- and Russia-centred geo-political and economic groupings.
- Though billed as “economic,” and having no explicit “security” element, the Vladivostok conference was nevertheless one that would go a long way towards meeting North Korea’s security concerns and making redundant its nuclear and missile programs. …Unstated, but plainly crucial, North Korea would accept the security guarantee of the five (Japan included), refrain from any further nuclear or missile testing, shelve (“freeze”) its existing programs and gain its longed for “normalization” in the form of incorporation in regional groupings, the lifting of sanctions and normalized relations with its neighbor states, without surrender….
- ….Vladivostok might mark a first step towards a comprehensive, long overdue, post-Cold War re-think of regional relationships….” (“North Korea and a Rules-Based Order for the Indo-Pacific, East Asia, and the World”, Gavan McCormick, The Asia-Pacific Journal)
In my opinion, Kim Jong-un is prepared to liquidate his nuclear weapons stockpile in order to join this massive regional development project that will draw the continents closer together, create new centers of power and prosperity, undermine Washington’s self-aggrandizing “pivot to Asia” strategy, and strengthen a rules-based multi-polar world order that protects the sovereignty and rights of all its members. Thus, “denuclearization” conceals a tectonic shift in the global power structure.
Bravo, for that.
[Y: A further few observations.
For those that say Trump pressured China to get North Korea to give up the nukes, it was clear to China that that Washington would continue its China-targetted trade war regardless of the outcome. This view has been justified. China loses nothing by co-operating with Washington where this benefits its own interests.
Outside of that it is very unlikely China will be pressured to accede to any further demands geopolitically or in trade without guaranteed reimbursement. Given Washington’s known duplicity to change tack when it dis not benefit the Deep State any deals with Washington mean exactly squat – as the EU are finding out the hard way. China therefore loses nothing either way.
I have also previously posted on OBOR (One Belt One Road) that Japan has joined in January at a joint conference of China-Russia-Japan-South Korea. Japan was key to North Korea immediately being asked by China to give its nukes. As you can see from the timeline this move by NK is no coincidence.
This trade bloc will – for the first time – bring together North Korea, South Korea, Japan, Russia and China with contributing trade from Malaysia Thailand, Vietnam and Phillipines. And there is nothing -short of a unilateral war in the Pacific – that Washington can do about it.
Y]
[1] http://www.unz.com/mwhitney/trump-did-not-convince-kim-to-ditch-his-nukes-china-did/
lol, no matter what Mike Whitney thinks none of this would be taking place with out Donald J Trump.
mgtow is its own worst enemy- https://www.campusreform.org/
lol, no matter what Mike Whitney thinks none of this would be taking place with out Donald J Trump.
Agreed and I thought I pulled up mgtow.com not msn.com.
"It seems like there's times a body gets struck down so low, there ain't a power on earth that can ever bring him up again. Seems like something inside dies so he don't even want to get up again. But he does."
Yumbo obviously has a lot of intelligence and is very good at finding and sharing it.
Like you guys, I disagree, at least with parts of this stuff, but he makes valid points.
I don’t see the big deal in celebrating Trump for his involvement in this historic event that hasn’t budged for 70 years.
The fact that this is occurring after 70 years, and along with Trump’s tactics, tells me it’s not just a China development thing.Love him or hate him, positive change is taking place; and Trump has been a dominant role in the changes.
China put Economic/Trading Pressure/Sanctions on N. Korea because THEY thought it was in the Best Interest of Peace. ??????
I THINK NOT……MAYBE ? Someone Else with MORE ECONOMIC INFLUENCE was Threatening the SAME PRESSURE UPON CHINA ??????
Like Most Things in Life; Follow the MONEY !!
Come On Moon Bat Mike, Lets connect the dots here ??????
In a World of Justin Beibers Be a Johnny Cash
Well, if your an asian country right now, its never been a better time to take care of your own affairs. As far as I can tell, business is doing great in these places as they start turning their attention to making money instead of trying to fight the CIA.
Hell, why bother with the USA. The government of old is imploding. Great time to make a buck elsewhere.
You are all alone. If you have been falsely accused of RAPE, DV, PLEASE let all men know about the people who did this. http://register-her.net/web/guest/home
Anonymous0Great article as usual Yumbo!
Like it or not guys, the geo-political landscape is changing and
MGTOWs would be well served to take notice and act accordingly. Having said that, I fear that nothing short of war will stop the change and also that it will take several decades to achieve. If one was twenty years old now his grandchildren might see it.Trump Did Not Convince North Korea to Ditch Nukes. China Did. That’s like saying Nixon didn’t get us out of Viet Nam, Kissinger did. But, who sent Kissinger? Trump engaged the North Koreans, the South Koreans, China AND Japan. That’s why all this is happening.
lol, no matter what Mike Whitney thinks none of this would be taking place with out Donald J Trump.
Kim is not his father. Trump is a master negotiator, and this proves it.
"Don't follow in my footsteps...I stepped in something."
It happened under his presidency rather than the previous 12.
A MGTOW is a man who is not a woman's bitch!
The anti-American media is never going to give President Trump is due on bringing peace. President Trump politically leans on China, North Korea, South Korea, and other nations to bring about this situation.
Unfortunately, even if peace was fully attained, the anti-Americanists will seek to undue the peace for the sole reason President Trump was behind this peace.
The anti-Americanists have openly made it clear they want to overthrow President Trump and silence his supporters for the sole reason of starting World War III.
There cannot be true peace until anti-Americanism is made a crime in the U.S.
Anonymous1I think Trump was THE catalyst in forcing China, Japan, and Korea into action. Asia is re-structuring their alliances accordingly. I don’t think this would have happened with out the Wild-Card that is Donald J. Trump.
China adamantly opposes nuclear weapons on the peninsula.
And for some reason conveniently waited until they were pressured by Trump before actually doing anything about it.
Nope. Don’t buy it.
Women are better at multitasking? Fucking up several things at once is not multitasking.
I have one question for Yumbo. If this perspective is true, and Trump didn’t actually do anything, and had no influence at all, then why didn’t this happen under the Obama presidency? Why did we not see this happen for 8 years under Obama? All that time China apparently had no influence over North Korea? But somehow Trump takes office, and China magically gets a backbone and something happens two years into Trump’s presidency and Trump has nothing to do with it? I find that scenario somewhat unlikely. I don’t doubt that what you’re saying to some extent is true. But if Trump wasn’t even at least indirectly involved, we would have seen this sometime in the last 9 years.
I have one question for Yumbo. If this perspective is true, and Trump didn’t actually do anything, and had no influence at all, then why didn’t this happen under the Obama presidency? Why did we not see this happen for 8 years under Obama? All that time China apparently had no influence over North Korea? But somehow Trump takes office, and China magically gets a backbone and something happens two years into Trump’s presidency and Trump has nothing to do with it? I find that scenario somewhat unlikely. I don’t doubt that what you’re saying to some extent is true. But if Trump wasn’t even at least indirectly involved, we would have seen this sometime in the last 9 years.
Wake up man. Democrat vs republican bush/obama/trump/makes no difference the same agenda is followed.
Project for the new american century irag,syria,lybia,iran next will be lebanon.
http://www.leavemeansleave.eu
http://www.leavemeansleave.eu
I have one question for Yumbo. If this perspective is true, and Trump didn’t actually do anything, and had no influence at all, then why didn’t this happen under the Obama presidency? Why did we not see this happen for 8 years under Obama? All that time China apparently had no influence over North Korea? But somehow Trump takes office, and China magically gets a backbone and something happens two years into Trump’s presidency and Trump has nothing to do with it? I find that scenario somewhat unlikely. I don’t doubt that what you’re saying to some extent is true. But if Trump wasn’t even at least indirectly involved, we would have seen this sometime in the last 9 years.
Wake up man. Democrat vs republican bush/obama/trump/makes no difference the same agenda is followed.
Project for the new american century irag,syria,lybia,iran next will be lebanon.
Is it really? Why was that “agenda” not followed under previous “leadership”? This “agenda” could have been accomplished decades ago. Not everything is a red herring.
I have one question for Yumbo. If this perspective is true, and Trump didn’t actually do anything, and had no influence at all, then why didn’t this happen under the Obama presidency? Why did we not see this happen for 8 years under Obama? All that time China apparently had no influence over North Korea? But somehow Trump takes office, and China magically gets a backbone and something happens two years into Trump’s presidency and Trump has nothing to do with it? I find that scenario somewhat unlikely. I don’t doubt that what you’re saying to some extent is true. But if Trump wasn’t even at least indirectly involved, we would have seen this sometime in the last 9 years.
Wake up man. Democrat vs republican bush/obama/trump/makes no difference the same agenda is followed.
Project for the new american century irag,syria,lybia,iran next will be lebanon.
The fact that Trump has systematically taken apart almost all of 0bama “accomplishments” just blows that theory out of the water.
mgtow is its own worst enemy- https://www.campusreform.org/
trump didn’t do it alone, but he had a lot to do with it. otherwise china would have done this a long time ago. china doesn’t want a trade war with the usa.
I bathe in the tears of single moms.
I thought this thread was started by M.G.H.O.W
proud carrier of the 'why?' chromosome
I have one question for Yumbo. If this perspective is true, and Trump didn’t actually do anything, and had no influence at all, then why didn’t this happen under the Obama presidency? Why did we not see this happen for 8 years under Obama? All that time China apparently had no influence over North Korea? But if Trump wasn’t even at least indirectly involved, we would have seen this sometime in the last 9 years.
Thanks for the valid questions. I am in and out of the forums so I reply when I can.
I can answer this for you from what I know of China’s political and economic landscape.
The main problem China had was to convince and prove to NK that China could provide a guarantee of NK’s safety in the event of a US military attack. This took time to fulfill.
This guarantee (or proof of it) could not be done during Obama’s tenure as China was not strong enough militarily or economically. Plus politics within China was split as to what course of action should be followed.
China is now in 2018 strong enough to offer strategic protection with a President who guarantees the outcome – so NK has agreed (with more than a bit of arm twisting).
The US Deep State pivot to China and Asia actually happened during Obama’s presidency. Trump is continuing the position of the Deep State after Obama completed his term. The control of American foreign policy is not with the US President. Everyone in world politics knows this.
That is the short answer – the details for the reasoning are given below
China looks at the strategic situation set by the Deep State and not at short-term non-events like Trump or Obama. China responds to the Deep State threats in its own way and this may or may not coincide with US timelines.
China’s own long-term safety was never in question. China’s security at that time was guaranteed by Putin’s Russia as well as being the production house for US goods and the saviour of the US recession-hit economy after 2008 – but that is another long story. However NK did not have any such guarantees on a repeat of 1950.
China had never wanted NK to become nuclear. This was an undertaking by NK alone as a response to large scale SK-US naval drills in the Pacific and Washington continually calling for war. China’s view is NK’s position destabilises the region without any real advantage, with the possibility of causing military skirmishes and making China’s military preparations for regional security more difficult.
During Obama’s tenure China was still actively urging for reconciliation through diplomatic means. This included NK’s nuclear programme. But from a position of military and economic weakness, not strength, in protecting NK.
It is commonly understood that China and Russia would not allow NK to fall but this does not mean massive damage could not have resulted from a limited war. Plus economically all of Asia and the US would suffer. A war in SK and Japan would not be in America’s interests and this is understood by Washington as well.
Therefore the US in practical terms are unable to engage in a military confrontation. But that does not stop the warmongering in the hope that something will give way. But this is the way of the Deep State. Irrational and ignorant.
The NK regime are well aware of the fate of Libya and Iraq. Regardless of how many times NK has come to the table to sign a peace treaty the US has always refused. This is on record and documented by reliable media sources. Therefore NK actually believed the US will one day attack as they were not convinced China-Russia would be able to fully protect the NK state.
(Both China and NK know that NK is not the ultimate target – it is China itself that the US cannot allow to become an economic superpower. NK is only a stepping stone for further US escalation of instability on the Korean Peninsula – similar to what happened in 1950 at the start of the Korean War.)
China has two issues to overcome to convince NK that China’s military support is there when needed and economic reintegration with NK’s neighbours can be achieved.
These two issues are:
1. Political and military clout internally and externally – China as a guarantor of regional security
During Obama’s presidency China had internal political divisions on how the country should be run and what the country’s position should be regarding the US and EU. There was a political power struggle going on between Xi and others in the party who supported North Korea. Not until last September when Xi became the undisputed leader of China and removed his opponents could he act to fulfill his goals to directly pressure North Korea to give up its nuclear arsenal. We will have to wait for exactly what China means by that.
During Obama’s tenure China needed to bolster its military and Navy in the South China Sea to oversee the security of its borders and also to NK’s position if it was attacked. The main elements of this defense arc have been tested in place in March 2018. The PLN South China Naval Fleet conducted exercises with over 48 warships, 76 fighter jets and 10,000 sailors including submarines and supported by their outer island group defensive perimeters holding ship-killing hypersonic missiles.
This would give the PLN the ability to protect itself, NK and other related assets from a possible American attack or false flag as what happened to start the Vietnam War. Recently American commanders have stated the US would not able able to carry out conventional military strikes in the SCS without unacceptable losses.
The ability of NK itself to cause extreme damage to SK and Japan is not questioned by anyone. Whatever the western press say, NK will not attack SK in this way unless attacked itself. So for all purposes a North Asian stalemate is in place at the present time. Other regional countries have no stomach to get involved.
It is not in the interests of both SK and Japan to be involved in a proxy war for the US that would be as bad as the prior one. However the American pressure is usually too great. Until China could engage and neutralise the US Fleet directly if required – SK and Japan had no option but to follow the US without question – until now.
This regional security requirement by China has been fulfilled in March 2018, so SK and Japan have compelling reasons not to follow up on any escalations required by Washington if Washington cannot guarantee their safety. They can take the initiative to wind tensions down – which exactly what SK is doing directly with NK and Japan giving tacit support to the peace framework. Note the US was never in the peace process between NK and SK. That is because the US does not want one but has no choice. How times have changed!
2. Economic clout to resist and overcome US economic sanctions while building up Asian trade through OBOR
This required two complementary and parallel actions to directly and indirectly help NK, SK and Japan economically to play ball with China. It is the current economic positions of SK and Japan that will be lost in a war scenario. China stops that from happening as well as throwing in long-term benefits the US is clearly unable to.
a. To ensure Asian allies of the US lose out on trade and economic benefits if they followed the US position to escalate tensions. Debarment from the development of the North Asia OBOR and other trade framework that China and Russia have put in place. Japan only joined OBOR in January 2018. This also elevates NK into a production and mining powerhouse for Japan and SK under the OBOR. Japan and SK will be fools to say no.
b. To put into practice a US dollar energy alternative for trade and conduct trade and loans in local currencies or in Chinese yuan.
To ensure an oil futures contract in petroyuan – this was put in place in Feb 2018.
The petroyuan is expected to start trading in June 2018 as the alternative to the US dollar.
To ensure US sanctions do not hit the payment system of trade by using Chinese CIPS and not SWIFT.
To ensure loans to NK through the AIIB and bypassing the IMF.All these systems are almost in place. China can give confidence to NK that whatever happens – NK’s future is assured outside of the bygone US unipolar world order.
It does not matter to China who is in the White House. Washington’s threats would have meant nothing if China chose to continue trade with NK or vetoed the motion for sanctions in the UN. China pushed North Korea when it suited China and not for any other reason.
It appears through the MSM that Trump has cornered everyone. Let people think that. The reality is that Washington’s position in Asia since the Vietnam Era is one of impotence.
Those who are deeply involved with the situation in North Asia do not give any credence to Trump’s threats or that of Washington. It is only China’s (and Russia’s) position that is of importance.
Hope this clarifies some parts of the situation. Again this is a very large topic and I can only give very limited and sweeping responses. Some people may compare me to the MSM or such – that is ok. As long as the men on this site do their own homework they can follow up on the facts.
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